Here at Keldaby we raise the beautiful, gentle and shyly friendly angora goats that provide Moonshine Design with the cloudsoft and highly lustrous mohair used in our fine selection of hand dyed, hand woven goods. Wrap yourself in a throw, toss a scarf or shawl around your shoulders or luxuriate in our fabulous ruanas. Step back to a more romantic era in a Western Isles hood. Discover the magic of mohair socks dyed in every color of the rainbow.
This is my second attempt to add photos of my watercolors. The previous–a “page” not a “post”–seems to be inaccessible and I wonder if I will ever comprehend how to do this! So I’m just going to go ahead a create a new post and hope it can be found easily. Most of these watercolors can be purchased and many are available as 5 x 7 cards.
Here are scenes of Colrain followed by some of Sicily, some of Orkney and finally a few of Oaxaca where I visited this past May. More–and older–watercolors can be found at Adventures in Watercolor.
Siracusa HarborMoonrise Over the Ring of BrodgarOaxaca Street with IsabelleBright StorefrontsMuseum of Culture
Our annual Crafts of Colrain Studio Tour is almost here! It would be great if our fabulous October colors and warm days would last until Veterans Day weekend—too much to hope for, but we can’t wait to see you soon!!
NOVEMBER 12th AND 13th 10 TO 4 o’clock
Here are a couple of news items:
This is the LAST year we will be selling our wonderful mohair socks. I know this will be a blow—and an incentive, perhaps—to many of you. Our supplier has retired and there are NO substitutes that I am willing to sell. These socks were always the best!
I also have several pieces of equipment I would like to sell:
A 36 inch Leclerc Artisat loom (4 harness) with a sectional beam, bench, tension box and warping board (which of course does not pertain when doing sectional warping but I’m throwing it in.) $1000. The same loom, new, is $2220
An Ashford 7 or 8 inch drum carder $300 (8 inch new is $675)
So this is the time of the year when nothing appeals more to me than knitting a new hat or…
…just plunging into watercolors. Here are a few of my new ones.
Colrain barn going down………………….a Conway barn…………………………………………and a farm on Rt 116
And of course dreaming of when we will be able to travel again. Our next Orkney trip, scheduled for this May, has been postponed until May 2022–but we already have our cottage reserved in Stromness! The anticipation and planning will give us lots of pleasure this coming year…….
Today I began to arrange my studio so visitors will be able to come here safely and spend time properly distanced! I spent part of the afternoon tying up dozens of pairs of socks which will be set up in baskets under the two tents leaving plenty of room inside for everyone to look at the rest of my items. And I am hurrying to finish one last hat–it’s a beauty–before Saturday morning. The goats were shorn last week during our lovely late Indian Summer days and will have enough fleece grown back before the really cold weather arrives.
Here they are just before shearing
If you are planning to visit the farm this weekend I recommend that you arrive by 3 in the afternoon. Keldaby Farm lies below Catamount Hill–a feature we failed to notice when we were buying the farm–and the sun is already sinking below our horizon by 4 o’clock this time of the year.
I’ll finish this hat tomorrow. Look at these beautiful ringlets from our little flock of colored Angoras
Too bad it wasn’t the weekend for the CRAFTS OF COLRAIN TOUR but it was a time for getting so much accomplished in the dye studio. I spent two full days in the beautiful Indian Summer weather dyeing mainly yarn but also quite a few socks. And here’s the proof!
I can’t wait to weave these yarns into throws and shawls. And knit with them too. And of course, I do sell the yarn, which is made for us at the Green Mountain Spinnery in Putney VT –65 percent our mohair, 35 percent wool, both single and two-ply–as well.
Fenris, our perfect Keeshond
and our crazy terrier-corgi Elli
Our super friendly pooches are ready to greet you!
What a spectacular day today has been!! Bright blue sky, gentle breezes and prospects for a happier future. I am already planning how I will set up under my tents so everyone will have plenty of space for social distancing because we’re just one week away from our CRAFTS OF COLRAIN STUDIO TOUR–oh please, Lady Luck, let next weekend will be as beautiful as this one! I decided to take a few photographs of my latest work, several nuno-felted scarves. As you probably know already, this is the process of felting wool and mohair onto silk, creating one pattern on the front and an entirely different design and look on the back. Here are my three new scarves:
Our annual studio tour here in Colrain Massachusetts will go mainly online this year, Saturday and Sunday, November 14th and 15th, from 10 am to 5 o’clock. And if you haven’t, be sure to go to the tour website at https://craftsofcolrain.com
HOWEVER, weather (and we’ve nearly always been lucky) and COVID restrictions permitting Moonshine Design at Keldaby Farm WILL BE OPEN for visitors. There will be baskets and baskets of socks set out under our tents!
A limited number of people will be allowed at a time into the studio to see the rest of our items. All the studio doors and windows will be open and everyone must be wearing a mask.
This morning we decide to make a real Scottish breakfast–minus the haggis and black sausage–and we sit around with cups of coffee enjoying our good cooking and scanning the sky for weather signs. It’s a cloudy grey but it looks like it will be just fine for our afternoon cruise up the western coast of Mainland on the Hamnavoe ferry. This is Nature Week and we’re already ticketholders for this trip.
At noon we head to the pier and are soon in line to join all our fellow travelers. We’ve never been on this ferry; it is more elegant than I expected, with lounges and bars and dining facilities. Exhibits have been set up by various nature groups and there are speakers discussing various aspects of island life. I listen to one from a birding society–she talks about the precipitous decline in the seabird populations–kittiwakes, skuas, fulmars, razorbills, guillemots and puffins–all of them have lost between 60 and 80 percent of their number. Climate change, of course, is the principal cause–from the bottom of the food chain (cold water plankton replaced by inappropriate warm water plankton) to the loss of other food sources which either no longer exist or appear too early in the season to be available when needed. We watch the birds dip and then soar above the water. It makes me sad. Everywhere as Neil Young sang “nature is on the run” and that was in the 1970s.
We pass Yesnaby and see the sea stacks, sail past the Bay of Skaill–Scara Brae just out of sight–around Marwick Head and the monument to Kitchener, then recognize the lighthouse on the Brough of Birsay. The boat about-faces at Eynhallow and we can glimpse Rousay not far off. I pay more attention to the shoreline on the way back trying to picture some of our drives along this coast. Without a decent camera I feel stymied but take many shots anyway–they are all terrible, unsurprisingly! As we head back into Hoy Sound however it is a perfect time to photograph Stromness for sketching later. We’ve never had the chance before to see the town from the water.
Near Yesnaby
Approaching Stromness
And to starboard, Graemsay
From the ferry
Back on land we buy Orkney ice creams, then head back to the cottage where we watch Four Weddings and a Funeral–still funny.
It’s a grey rainy day so we’re spending the morning knitting and drawing and then as the weather clears a bit we walk into town checking out a few stores, some of which we had never been in before.
After lunch, Jason Scott, Rosemary’s right hand man, renovation carpenter, fixer-upper and general manager, stops around so we invite him in for tea. We had met him two years ago during the clogged water pipe, drainage, no hot water crisis when he had twice performed miracles to get us back on track. He told us all about his trip last winter to stay with the Andersons at their home in South Africa and we learn a bit more about Rex (Orcadian) and Rosemary (Africaans, I think). He shows us photos and then tells us that Rosemary has bought another Stromness house that he will be re-doing. Although from the outside it looks very substantial and well-preserved he says it will take a lot of work to restore. No one has lived in it for years and before that it had suffered from neglect. Then he pulls out photos of the cottage we’re staying in so we can see what it had been like before the renovation. He’s definitely a talented guy!
Here’s a photo of the new house Jason will be redoing this year
At 3 o’clock we walk down to the little restaurant near the ferry terminal, Julia’s, to meet Jen and Jill’s friends from Vermont, another Anderson couple–no relation–Rosamund and Julius. We had met them at Jen’s for lunch before our first trip in 2014 when they had given us much information about places to go, where to buy supplies, good restaurants. They have owned for a number of years, maybe 20 or so, a house and forty acres on Egilsay where they spend a good portion of the year. Now they have finally acquired an old pick-up which they leave in Tingwall so they have transportation for Mainland shopping. We could actually see (we think!) their house when we took the ferry to Rousay. We discuss the persistence of the Pictish body and facial type in Scotland and even on Orkney while we drink our coffees and enjoy the pastries.
It’s too early when we leave Julia’s to pick up our dinner of fish and chips from the Peedie Chippie van parked right next door on Saturdays (Fridays it’s in Finston where we had bought our dinners on our last trip) so we head back to the cottage for a bit of knitting, then drive back to pick up our dinners later. It’s official, at least to me, that we are now on the downhill slide toward the end of our adventure. I’m trying not to indulge in premature nostalgia! I finish the scaruffle I’ve been knitting, we watch Bucket List with Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicolson…and so ends the evening.